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![]() by Staff Writers Seoul (AFP) Dec 21, 2010
South Koreans trying to tweet with North Korea will be punished, Seoul officials have warned, as the communist state ratchets up an online propaganda drive via popular websites such as Twitter and YouTube. The Justice Ministry, in its 2011 operation plan, said those who forward the North's Twitter postings to others or post comments on its postings via "retweet" or "reply" will face punishment. There was no information on what kind of punishment the offenders will face. "This is a measure in response to North Korea's recent attacks on the South Korean navy ship Cheonan and Yeonpyeong island, which signified the importance of national security," JoongAng Daily quoted deputy Justice Minister Hwang Hee-Chul as saying. Hwang was referring to the North's alleged torpedo attack on a Seoul warship that killed 46 sailors in March, and the November 23 shelling attack on the border island that left four South Koreans dead. The communist North in August joined Twitter under the name @uriminzok (our own nationals), months after its foray into popular video-sharing site, YouTube. It has more than 10,000 followers and has made more than 600 postings on YouTube, criticising South Korea and the United States and denying Seoul's accusation that Pyongyang attacked the warship. North Korea, one of the world's most tightly controlled states, is believed to have an elite unit of hackers, but few of its citizens have access to a computer, let alone the Internet. Under the South's anti-communist National Security Law, people are banned from unauthorised communication with North Koreans and offenders can be jailed. The South blocked direct access to the North's Twitter account but followers can still view recent messages through feeds or automatic updates sent to their own accounts.
earlier related report A South Korean church switched on Christmas lights in the shape of a tree atop a military-controlled hill near the tense land border -- the first such display for seven years. "This is purely for religious purposes," pastor Koh Young-Yong told AFP, adding the ceremony drew about 300 church members. The event came a day after South Korea staged a live-fire exercise on the border island of Yeonpyeong, which was bombarded by North Korea last month. The North forswore retaliation despite previously vowing a deadly response to the South's drill. But officials were concerned the Christmas tree could become a target for attack. When asked by lawmakers if South Korea would fire back in case of a North Korean attack on the Christmas tree, Defence Minister Kim Kwan-Jin replied: "We are ready to retaliate resolutely so that the source of gunfire will be removed." A defence ministry spokesman said: "Marines are maintaining the highest level of alertness around the hill," citing the North's continued threats to strike border propaganda facilities. The 155-metre (511-foot) hill, about three kilometres (two miles) from the border, is within range of North Korean gunfire. The two Koreas in 2004 reached a deal to halt official-level cross-border propaganda and the South stopped its annual Christmas tree illumination ceremony. The communist North had accused the South of displaying Christmas lights to spread religion among its people and soldiers. The North's constitution provides for religious freedom, but the US State Department says this does not in practice exist. The South has partially resumed a cross-border government propaganda campaign following the March sinking of a South Korean warship and the bombardment of Yeonpyeong, which killed four people including two civilians. Soon after last month's artillery attack, the South's military reportedly floated 400,000 leaflets across the border denouncing the North's regime. The South has also installed loudspeakers along the land border but has not yet switched them on. They are designed to blast anti-regime and pro-democracy messages deep into the border region. North Korea has threatened to open fire on the speakers if they are switched on, and also to fire at locations from where leaflets are released. Private activist groups frequently float huge balloons across the heavily fortified frontier. These carry tens of thousands of leaflets denouncing the regime of Kim Jong-Il.
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